A stroke of ill fortune
There
nothing quite like a family tragedy to put the plight of the disabled into
perspective.
If you and
your loved ones have escaped misfortune consider yourself lucky – and pause to
ponder the situation of others.
If that’s
too onerous a task for everyday, just set time aside tomorrow (Mon 3 Dec) for
the International Day of People with Disabilities.
This year’s
theme is Removing Barriers.
There’s no shortage.
Like
millions of others, my brother-in-law and his immediate family wish they could
squash a year of distress into just one day.
My BIL only
partially fitted the profile of a stroke victim: No spare flesh, under 55, not diabetic,
doesn’t smoke (but used to), eats frugally, though not always well. He’s been a stranger to doctors and a
splendid armchair sportsman.
One morning
last year he was ambushed and felled by a tiny arterial obstruction. Had he got to a modern hospital within four
hours and been injected with the new wonder clot-busting drugs he might now be
fully active.
Instead his
recovery has been incomplete. That he’s
now out of a wheelchair and can shuffle down the street almost unaided is a
tribute to his determination and the perseverance of close family and friends.
The
disabled share their suffering. Stroke victims aren’t easy to handle. They often get uncontrollably emotional over
the smallest issues, losing temper, straining relationships. Arm and leg lifting exercises tax patient and
helper because progress is measured in hair widths and never guaranteed.
At times
like these families should demand hospitals give therapists and nurses the sort
of salaries reserved for directors.
Tried
pushing a wheelchair along an Indonesian sidewalk? Civic authorities clearly haven’t, or there
wouldn’t be steep kerbs and black holes big enough to swallow chair and carer.
Ever relied
on the stability of a crutch to keep upright?
Then you’ll know about fearing fractured footpaths and curse the
unthinking who park across pavements.
There are supposed
to be laws insisting on disabled access to every public building. Take time
tomorrow to check the ramps, lifts and door widths around your office.
Then count
the number of handicapped in your workplace.
It’s supposed to be at least one per cent. It probably isn’t. Ask why.
Because
Indonesians are curious and friendly people, convalescent exercises in public
become chatterthons revealing the huge number of families in similar
situations.
These
encounters can be depressing if dad died, therapeutic if uncle bounced back and
is now a gymnastics champ.
There are
no accurate statistics for the number of stroke victims in Indonesia but the indicators show
more than four million new cases in the Republic every year.
Sounds too
few. Those who’ve cared for a victim
soon pick the familiar signs in the streets – the half-raised hand, the
one-foot drag, the crablike movement, unwiped spittle and slurred speech. Such
people seem to be everywhere – and they’re the survivors.
Strokes kill. If they fail first time, like political
candidates they often try again. At least one in four
will be thumped anew, usually within five years.
Drug
companies claim strokes are now the number one cause of death for all
non-communicable diseases.
What does
all this mean to those of us who haven’t felt our chests suddenly gripped and
crushed by a giant hand and experienced the icy press of mortality competing
with the sweat of terror?
Recognize
the symptoms. Rush to hospital; better
to lose your dignity if it’s heartburn than your life if it’s not.
Reduce the
risks. Keeping blood pressure down is vital, say doctors. So is exercise and eating low cholesterol
foods. Smoking is not an option.
Apart from
wishing a speedy return to normality for victims and families, here’s an appeal
to every legislator and civil engineer: Consider the handicapped in your
plans. Just a little care and
forethought can make a difference in the lives of those less nimble.
But hey,
wait a minute: A decent society is measured by the way the less fortunate, the
distressed and disadvantaged are treated.
Do we really need a United Nations day to make us do something that
should come naturally?
(First published in The Sunday Post, 2 December 2012)
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